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Chloé Zhao on “Hamnet,” Her Film About the Grief of William Shakespeare

2025-12-06 04:06:02

2025-12-05T19:00:00.000Z

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Chloé Zhao was the second woman to ever win an Oscar for Best Director, for her 2020 film “Nomadland.” After taking a wide turn to create the Marvel supernatural epic “Eternals,” Zhao has taken another intriguing change of direction with “Hamnet,” based on Maggie O’Farrell’s novel about how William Shakespeare coped with the death of his only son. In conversation with the New Yorker staff writer Michael Schulman, Zhao discusses the role that nature plays in her filmmaking, from the American West to the forests of Britain; the process of adapting manga to film; and how neurodivergence informs her creative process.

New episodes of The New Yorker Radio Hour drop every Tuesday and Friday. Follow the show wherever you get your podcasts.

The New Yorker Radio Hour is a co-production of WNYC Studios and The New Yorker.



Adam Schiff on How the Trump Administration Targets Its Opponents

2025-12-06 04:06:02

2025-12-05T19:00:00.000Z

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As a California congressman, Adam Schiff was the lead manager during the first impeachment proceedings against Donald Trump. He later served on the January 6th committee. Trump has castigated him as “Shifty Schiff” and demanded that the Justice Department investigate him. In a conversation with David Remnick, Schiff discusses the current inquiry into his mortgage by federal authorities, the Supreme Court’s primary role in enabling this Administration, and why he thinks the rule of law in America is “hanging by a thread.” Unlike some Democrats, Schiff is not sanguine that the release of the Epstein files will damage Trump politically. “If there are ruinous things in the files . . . Bondi and company will make sure they never reach the public eye,” Schiff says. But also, “I think he’s almost impervious to dirt.”

New episodes of The New Yorker Radio Hour drop every Tuesday and Friday. Follow the show wherever you get your podcasts.

The New Yorker Radio Hour is a co-production of WNYC Studios and The New Yorker.

Daily Cartoon: Friday, December 5th

2025-12-05 23:06:02

2025-12-05T14:42:47.630Z
A mom holds a puffy winter coat and addresses her small child.
“It looks big, but once we have you in several layers of clothing it will fit just right.”
Cartoon by Amy Hwang

The Best Films of 2025

2025-12-05 20:06:02

2025-12-05T11:00:00.000Z

Our film critics watch a lot of movies in a year. By December, their viewing slates span international standouts, festival favorites, studio blockbusters, and plenty more in between. Below, Justin Chang and Richard Brody take us through the year in film and rank the best offerings, two different ways.


A Brilliant Year for Movies and a Terrible One for Almost Everything Else

JUSTIN CHANG

One of the most emotionally overwhelming scenes in any new movie this year takes place at a New Year’s Eve party. Partway through Julia Loktev’s enthralling documentary, “My Undesirable Friends: Part I—Last Air in Moscow,” we find ourselves at a gathering of several Russian independent journalists, toasting the end of a truly hellish 2021 (“To a new year without Putin!”). They huddle around a TV and watch a compilation of video clips from various friends and fellow-travellers (journalists, activists, human-rights workers, election watchdogs, and more), who unleash a welcome flood of encouraging messages: “It wasn’t an easy year”; “We expected it to be bad, but it turned out even worse”; “Hell is breaking loose”; “But it’s O.K., somehow we survived”; “The solidarity of young people amazes me”; “Remember, any catastrophe can be turned into a step forward”; “Everything changes. We have to remember that it changes thanks to us”; “Friends, breathe deeper. Reboot yourselves”; “Evil is not eternal, and truth will surely win.”

2022, of course, does not turn out to be a year without Putin. In February, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine will begin, forcing Loktev’s journalist-subjects, who have already been stigmatized by the government for doing their jobs, to flee the country altogether—a crisis that registers onscreen with an almost unbearable suspense. Movies have a curious ability to not only build and amplify tension but also to preserve it for future viewings. Nearly four years of war have passed since that defiantly hopeful New Year’s Eve, and yet, to watch Loktev’s film at this moment is to feel its urgency as if it had been filmed yesterday—and to be warmed by the collective spirit behind those heartfelt messages of strength and courage, even if the times have only gotten darker since they were spoken. Needless to say, those messages are hardly applicable to the Russian opposition movement alone. For any American feeling benumbed into hopelessness by the first year of the second Trump Administration—including its ongoing assaults on the practitioners and, indeed, the very notion of a free press—the time to watch and take heart from this brave, brilliant movie is surely now.

Several of the films on my best-of-the-year list, including “Last Air in Moscow,” are fundamentally timeless expressions and explorations of solidarity. They take us inside authoritarian crackdowns, debate the ways and means of dissidence, and weigh the physical and ethical costs of retributive violence. Jafar Panahi’s “It Was Just an Accident,” a searing moral thriller about a group of Iranian former political prisoners who are granted a once-in-a-lifetime chance to avenge themselves, felt indelibly in conversation with Paul Thomas Anderson’s “One Battle After Another,” about an underground revolutionary movement in tatters, trying to survive long enough to fight and sometimes kill another day. In both these films—and also in Kleber Mendonça Filho’s “The Secret Agent,” in which the war for Brazil’s political soul, then and now, is also shown to be one battle after another—the characters cannot outrun the wounds, scars, and fatal missteps of the past. They must confront them head on, and not only for themselves but for the future generations who will inherit and, perhaps, ameliorate their struggles.

Questions of moral and political legacy crept up even in the context of a crackerjack entertainment like “Wake Up Dead Man,” the latest “Knives Out” mystery from the director and screenwriter Rian Johnson. This one takes place in and around a Catholic parish in upstate New York, and what’s bracing about the movie is the way it deploys the usual panoply of detective-story conventions—and the crucial character of an earnest priest (Josh O’Connor), making a radical argument for the eternal power and relevance of Christ’s love—to mount an ingenious reclamation of Christianity from the political right. If you want to gauge the full measure of O’Connor’s range as an actor, do seek out his very different performance in Kelly Reichardt’s “The Mastermind,” in which he plays a harebrained thief with no convictions to speak of. Reichardt’s film, pointedly set against the Vietnam War protests of 1970, delivers its own off-center ode to political solidarity; in the margins of her story, Reichardt quietly reveals the grim consequences of standing for no one and nothing besides one’s own interests.

More than once, 2025 has struck me as a brilliant, dazzling year for movies and a terrible one for damn near everything else. Perhaps my working life as a critic has conditioned me into such a response; the movies have long been not just my cultural sustenance but also a personal wellspring of sanity. I don’t know how to reconcile my unfashionable optimism about the state of the medium—my sense that I saw more good and even great movies this year, from all over the world, than I have in any year since the pandemic—with the dismal box-office reports, the rumors of impending studio mergers, and various other doomsday laments that have dominated Hollywood headlines. As we prepare to ring in a new year of moviegoing, the best encouragement I can offer is to shrug and note that art finds a way.

Solidarity being the central though hardly the only theme, I have, in continuation of a long-standing personal tradition, ranked my favorite films of the year as a series of annotated pairings, plus one trio. In the interest of spreading the wealth and honoring the spirit of 2025, my list comprises twenty-five films, plus a handful of honorable mentions.

1. “Sirāt” and 2. “One Battle After Another”

Figure stands in dark wearing a sweatshirt with hood pulled up.
Leonardo DiCaprio in “One Battle After Another.”Photograph courtesy Warner Bros. / Everett

The two best movies I saw this year both unfold under a cloud of doomy portent: as the world burns, a father searches for his missing daughter across a vast and unyielding landscape. In Oliver Laxe’s visually and sonically overwhelming survival thriller, “Sirāt,” the father is played by Sergi López, and the journey he embarks upon, in the improbable company of several desert ravers, is one of unfathomable shock and tragedy. But the movie isn’t a cheaply cynical or nihilistic experience; its gravest horrors spring from a complex understanding of how human compassion persists in a universe that is fundamentally opposed to its existence. Improbable acts of kindness and solidarity also power Paul Thomas Anderson’s political chase thriller “One Battle After Another,” which laughs impudently—and entertains generously—in the face of a police-state nightmare overseen by white-supremacist grotesques. The dad is played by Leonardo DiCaprio, doing his best and, not coincidentally, funniest work since “The Wolf of Wall Street” (2013).

3. “Caught by the Tides” and 4. “Resurrection”

Two Chinese filmmakers, one a middle-aged master and the other a prodigious young upstart, gave us the two most formally audacious features of the year. In “Caught by the Tides,” Jia Zhangke weaves two decades’ worth of footage from his personal archive—some of it cleverly repurposed, some of it strikingly new—into an emotionally turbulent romantic drama of missed connections, thwarted longings, and unexpected beginnings. In “Resurrection,” the romance is with the cinema itself: Bi Gan draws us into a surreal labyrinth of stories, genres, and styles, with a dexterous and imaginative potted history of the medium playing out in the shadows. Both filmmakers, notably, salute the silent era: Bi through witty homages to F. W. Murnau and the Lumière brothers, Jia by coaxing forth an aching, wordless performance from his longtime collaborator Zhao Tao. In the century-old moment of cinema’s birth, these artists see the possibility of a grand reawakening.

5. “My Undesirable Friends: Part I—Last Air in Moscow” and 6. “The Secret Agent”

The brave independent journalists we meet in Julia Loktev’s extraordinarily tenacious documentary “My Undesirable Friends: Part I—Last Air in Moscow” have been classified as “foreign agents” by Vladimir Putin’s regime—a designation that makes it all the harder for them to do their jobs, especially in the awful months leading up to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. In “The Secret Agent,” Kleber Mendonça Filho’s emotionally overflowing chronicle of life under Brazil’s military dictatorship, the protagonist (Wagner Moura, in the year’s most magnetic star turn) is not a secret agent at all, but he is forced to behave like one simply in order to survive. Patience is the name of the game here, for the characters we meet and the filmmakers behind the camera: Mendonça’s film ranges far and wide, so justly taken with the richness of its own human canvas that it’s in no hurry to piece its story together. Loktev’s epic, unfolding in five equally gripping parts, is the work of a filmmaker fearlessly following an unpredictable yarn wherever it takes her. (She’s still following it even now; what happens next will be revealed in “My Undesirable Friends: Part II—Exile.”)

7. “Sound of Falling,” 8. “April,” and 9. “On Becoming a Guinea Fowl”

The abuse and suppression of women’s bodies, a constant the world over, takes especially insidious root in a northern German farmstead, the setting of Mascha Schilinski’s “Sound of Falling”; a rural stretch of eastern Georgia, where Dea Kulumbegashvili’s “April” unfolds; and a middle-class Zambian suburb, in Rungano Nyoni’s “On Becoming a Guinea Fowl.” All three of these films are second features, directed with startling assurance and a willingness to shatter conventional boundaries of narrative time and space—to create formal ruptures and patterns born of the women’s shared experiences of trauma. In “Sound of Falling,” the camera could well be wielded by ghosts, haunting the same set of rooms across generations. In “April,” a mysteriously suffering creature wanders a gloomy landscape, bearing burdens that make it all but impossible for her to breathe. And, on a more hopeful note, in “On Becoming a Guinea Fowl,” a woman is symbolically transfigured into the bird of the film’s title, a creature known for its ruthlessly protective instincts.

10. “It Was Just an Accident” and 11. “Cloud”

The two purest thrillers of the year both propose that vigilantism, even if it isn’t the answer, can be wielded in service of important questions. In Jafar Panahi’s “It Was Just an Accident,” winner of the Palme d’Or at this year’s Cannes Film Festival, a group of former prisoners seek retribution against the man who tortured them behind bars—a scenario loosely yet forcefully informed by Panahi’s own past detention by the Iranian government, and infused with an anger so righteously intense that it could burn a hole in the screen. (Earlier this week, Panahi, who has been in the U.S. promoting the film, was sentenced in absentia by a court in Tehran to a year in prison and given a two-year travel ban.) In Kiyoshi Kurosawa’s “Cloud,” several armed and disgruntled men team up online to eliminate a common nemesis; it’s a chilling study in what life on the internet has wrought, from cutthroat business practices to recreational murder. Both films are built around the same disquieting takeaway: revenge is a dish best served not just cold but with as little hesitation as possible.

12. “Blue Moon” and 13. “Who by Fire”

Leaving aside their popular song-inspired titles, “Blue Moon,” Richard Linklater’s lovingly acerbic portrait of the lyricist Lorenz Hart (an outstanding Ethan Hawke), and “Who by Fire,” Philippe Lesage’s blistering drama about a group vacation from hell, are the year’s two most incisively detailed portraits of the fraught and complicated relationships that can develop between artists. In each film, two men who were once close friends and creative partners have an awkwardly passive-aggressive reunion, awakening inextricably bound feelings of affection, resentment, competitiveness, and begrudging camaraderie. And as the aftermath plays out, a new generation of aspiring artists is quietly watching—and learning.

14. “Marty Supreme” and 15. “If I Had Legs I’d Kick You”

Young male figure wearing dark clothes holds a ping pong paddle and points towards the camera
Timothée Chalamet in “Marty Supreme.”Photograph courtesy A24 / Everett

The cinema of non-stop nail-biting has found two terrific new standard-bearers—and produced two of the year’s most vigorously sustained leading performances. In Josh Safdie’s globe-trotting nineteen-fifties comedy, “Marty Supreme,” Timothée Chalamet is, like the New York table-tennis whiz he plays, a man in the dogged and unapologetic pursuit of greatness. In Mary Bronstein’s hyper-adrenalized domestic-horror movie, “If I Had Legs I’d Kick You,” Rose Byrne scales dizzying new heights of maternal anxiety as a Montauk therapist who has long since reached the end of her tether. The two movies share a producer, Ronald Bronstein (husband of Mary), who also co-wrote and edited “Marty Supreme.” They also both possess a darkly exhilarating momentum, an almost competitive refusal to let their protagonists’ energies go unmatched.

16. “The Mastermind” and 17. “No Other Choice”

An unemployed husband and father decides to seize control of a dire situation, only to make things direr still. So begins Kelly Reichardt’s exquisitely crafted art-heist film, “The Mastermind,” starring Josh O’Connor—in the most sneakily trenchant of his four major performances this year—as a privileged fuckup with delusions of criminal grandeur. So, too, begins Park Chan-wook’s gleefully rambunctious anti-corporate murder farce, “No Other Choice,” in which Lee Byung-hun, unleashing an exuberant slapstick energy, becomes a bumbling crook for the ages.

18. “Sorry, Baby” and 19. “Souleymane’s Story”

Two figures sit outside looking toward each other.
Eva Victor and John Carroll Lynch in “Sorry, Baby.”Photograph by Philip Keith / A24 / Everett

In one of many gemlike scenes in “Sorry, Baby,” a young English-literature professor (Eva Victor, making a terrific feature début as writer, director, and actor) is questioned on a jury panel about whether she’s ever been the victim of a crime. Toward the end of Boris Lojkine’s heartbreaking immigrant drama, “Souleymane’s Story,” an undocumented Guinean laborer (Abou Sangaré) in Paris submits to an in-person interview during his quest for asylum. Here are two perfectly observed, exactingly empathetic character studies, both concerned with questions of what we owe the law and what the law owes us, and both firm in the conviction that a person’s story is theirs to tell and no one else’s.

20. “Black Bag” and 21. “Presence”

Richard Linklater had one of the great double bills of 2025 (see Nos. 12 and 25 on this list). The director Steven Soderbergh and the screenwriter David Koepp had another with “Black Bag,” a delectably witty espionage thriller with a slippery yet sincere marital drama at its core, and “Presence,” a formally ingenious ghost story that doubles as a chronicle of family dysfunction. Both films are ultimately home-invasion thrillers of a sort, in which the precise nature of the invasion, and the motives of the invader(s), remain a mystery until the final moments. They confirm Soderbergh and Koepp as one of the nimblest and most reliable creative partnerships at work anywhere in the vicinity of Hollywood today.

22. “Misericordia” and 23. “Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery”

Suspicious priests, wacky confessions, unexplained disappearances, grisly murders: such is the terrain of “Misericordia,” Alain Guiraudie’s hilariously deadpan thriller about a prodigal sociopath, and “Wake Up Dead Man,” Rian Johnson’s intricately constructed parochial whodunnit. Guiraudie’s film may ultimately be the richer, wilder, less orthodox entertainment, but Johnson’s inspired puzzle-making, here and in his two previous “Knives Out” mysteries, remains a welcome throwback pleasure indeed.

24. “Sinners” and 25. “Nouvelle Vague”

Blackandwhite image of two figures sitting at a restaurant table turned toward each other.
Zoey Deutch, Aubry Dullin, and Guillaume Marbeck in “Nouvelle Vague.”Photograph courtesy Netflix / Everett

Hear me out: “Sinners,” Ryan Coogler’s rigorously imagined thriller-fantasy set during the era of Jim Crow, and “Nouvelle Vague,” Richard Linklater’s rigorously researched comedy about the making of Jean-Luc Godard’s “Breathless,” are the year’s two most exacting studies in let’s-put-on-a-show entrepreneurship, in which a band of outsiders join together in scrappy pursuit of creative principles that defy the commercial norms of their era. Coogler shows what it takes to open a juke joint; Linklater unpacks what it takes to make a Jean-Luc joint. “Sinners” culminates in a showdown with bloodthirsty vampires; “Nouvelle Vague,” for some, is a curious exercise in vampirism, crowned by Guillaume Marbeck’s uncanny embodiment of Godard’s cool—a performance that practically flirts with bodily possession.

Honorable mentions

28 Years Later,” “Below the Clouds,” “BLKNWS: Terms & Conditions,” “Cover-Up,” “Eephus,” “Father Mother Sister Brother,” “Grand Tour,” “Is This Thing On?,” “The Love That Remains,” “Magellan,” “The Perfect Neighbor,” “Peter Hujar’s Day,” “Put Your Soul on Your Hand and Walk,” “The Shrouds,” “Warfare,” and “Weapons.”


The Year’s Best Movies Are Reflections, Assertions, and Expansions of the Art

RICHARD BRODY

Last year at this time, an expanded cinema dominated local movie theatres, introducing spectacular cinematic forms—the point-of-view shots in “Nickel Boys,” the fragmented narrative of “Christmas Eve in Miller’s Point”—that lost none of their abstract wonders when seen on small screens at home. This year’s movies have been different: the best of them have brought old-fashioned, sensory spectacle back to the movies, albeit in new ways. Movies as immediately eye-catching attractions, built to thrill with size and scale and scope, follow in a venerable tradition of enticing viewers to movie theatres for experiences inaccessible via home viewing. In this regard, the makers of some of the year’s most substantial films are reproducing razzle-dazzle strategies that, in recent times, have largely been the province of commerce-striving blockbusters. That effort has a historical precedent: in the nineteen-fifties, Hollywood juiced movies with such techniques as widescreen images, stereo sound, and 3-D effects, in order to offer moviegoers what a rapidly ascending source of home entertainment—television—could not.

The economic rationale is obvious: ticket sales are still a major source of revenue for movies. But what’s fascinating is that many of the year’s best movies, even ones made by streaming services and given only nominal theatrical releases—such as “Hedda” and “Highest 2 Lowest”—share the spectacular dimension. What the immensity and the sensory intensity of these movies evoke is something of a paradox: not fantasy or distraction but a confrontation with the power dynamics of public life. It takes more than money to create such extravaganzas, and, with these movies, the additional elements show. Along with their physical splendor, the films in question embody the conflict-riddled abstractions—companies and contracts, laws and institutions—on which they depend.

This year’s best movies feel plugged in, inextricably connected to forces bigger than the ordinary faces of local and private authority—and confrontationally so, with a sense of danger and urgency amid forms of pressure that are all the more terrifying for acting invisibly and inexorably. In other words, these movies are all political thrillers—some of them literally so, with stories that overtly involve governmental actions. Others, whose stories merely suggest a political perspective, are no less energized by it. In all, the usual cinematic run of crime and evasion, desperate measures and paranoid obsessions, reverberate with a specific sense of playing for more than a payday or a romance. The films belong to history at large.

Spectacular cinema, regardless of substance or commercial appeal, places special artistic demands on directors, for the simple reason that it involves events and actions beyond the daily purview. Extraordinary subjects call for extraordinary styles, which is why this year’s best films offer the special thrills of aesthetic tours de force pulled off with flair. That’s also why there’s something especially disheartening about mediocrity on a grand scale, as with the glut of overproduced, overblown franchise films, which lack both personalized imagination and the more modest virtue of clear observation.

Last month, the industry analyst Richard Rushfield noted that “suddenly, Hollywood isn’t making dramatic films anymore,” and did some box-office analysis demonstrating both the dearth of drama (defined loosely as earnest realism) and its lack of commercial success. But he also noted that the genre still thrives—on TV. The success of drama in TV-series form suggests that it’s actually wrong to blame the box office for the waning of the genre on the big screen. What has doomed movie dramas is, instead, their aesthetic (or lack thereof). Because their basic concern is with psychology and messaging, screenplays dominate and the direction is often merely functional, as it also tends to be on TV (because of the script-driven demands of showrunning) and with franchise films (because of domineering studios). Even independent dramatic features made without overbearing producers are often directed no more originally than ones made for TV. That’s the artistic hazard of realism: the filming of ordinary life in realistic ways defaults to inconspicuous and modest styles.

This isn’t just a problem for Hollywood and independent filmmakers. It has long been an issue in international filmmaking, intensifying in recent years. Because of economic difficulties in national film industries (whether a matter of box-office or of financing) international co-productions have proliferated, and these often yield a blandly homogenized international style. Alternatively, sometimes the quest to reach world markets by way of film-festival acclaim gives rise to the opposite—to big swings and big misses, the kind of festival films that, by ambition, idiosyncrasy, and length, cut through the clamor but exude affectation and effortfulness. (Such flashy methods also often elide substance in favor of hand-waving generalities and coy silences, as in such recent releases as “Sirāt” and “Sound of Falling.”)

In other words, festival darlings, from here or elsewhere, frequently offer borrowed styles, modelling themselves either on commercial successes or on succès d’estime and providing little in the way of an immediate and first-person reckoning with cinematic form. This, above all, is what’s at stake in the year’s exciting spate of self-aware cinematic spectacles. In their confrontations with power, the year’s best films also confront the artistic power of the cinema itself. Their spectacular aspect neither diminishes nor merely adorns their subjects; the challenge that this year’s best films meet is to develop copious texts, energetic dramas, and substantial ideas by way of a turn to the image, by attention to the “how” and the “why” of movies. The year’s best movies are reflections, assertions, and expansions of the art of the cinema itself, at a time when the art form is under siege from its small-screen rivals.

1. “Sinners”

Closeup image of two figures standing close together looking above camera with fearful looks on their faces.
Michael B. Jordan and Miles Caton in “Sinners.”Photograph courtesy Warner Bros. / Everett

The dazzling virtuosity with which Ryan Coogler meets the technical challenge of casting Michael B. Jordan in the dual role of identical twins is matched by the conceptual audacity of this historical drama, set in rural Mississippi in 1932, and centered on the essence of the blues and the music’s colossal reach—emotional, cultural, political, economic, and even metaphysical. The twins, returning home after enriching themselves in gangland Chicago, open a juke joint and hire a young prodigy and an esteemed elder to perform there. By raising their music to new local prominence, they unintentionally attract cosmic predators (vampires!) who hope to lay hold of it. Coogler melds a richly detailed social background—a vision of the inescapable violence of the Jim Crow era—with the overwhelming romanticism of love and lust under fire.

2. “The Mastermind”

Setting this drama of a quick heist and its long aftermath in 1970, amid nationwide protests against the Vietnam War and Nixonian efforts to repress dissent, Kelly Reichardt extracts a criminal scheme from the petty realm of profit and recognizes it as desperate, blundering existential revolt. Josh O’Connor plays the titular planner, an out-of-work cabinetmaker at odds with his suburban comforts and the vague constraints of ordinary life, who devises a plan to steal paintings from a museum and thereby launches himself into extraordinary adventures—comedic, melancholy, calamitous—that mesh ever tighter with the political conflicts of the day.

3. “The Secret Agent”

The mind-bending pressures of political persecution under an authoritarian regime are merely the premise for the Brazilian director Kleber Mendonça Filho’s ample, turbulent, propulsively energetic, and ferociously principled drama, set in 1977, while the country was ruled by a military dictatorship. Wagner Moura brings taut control and thoughtful dynamism to the role of a scientist driven into hiding by legal and extralegal threats. Mendonça centers the expressively written, finely observed story on the safe house where the scientist is harbored and exalts his extended community of secret sympathizers while also contemplating in unflinching detail the crude malevolence of his persecutors.

4. “The Phoenician Scheme”

Wes Anderson’s films are always plugged in, or, at least, have been so since “Moonrise Kingdom.” With the highest degree of fantasy, he approaches political life with a blend of hands-on conflict and philosophical abstraction, and in this movie he pursues the tendency to distant extremes, viewing international tycoonery and industrial modernization amid espionage, imperialism, and revolt—and also amid family conflict. As ever, Anderson’s hyper-ornamental style is a crucially substantial embodiment of power. Here, that power is also domestic: this is one of the year’s many films in which a father-daughter bond is the engine of drama.

5. “Hedda”

Closeup of figure wearing nice jewelry and putting an object to her mouth.
Tessa Thompson in “Hedda.”Photograph courtesy Amazon MGM Studios / Everett

Nia DaCosta supercharges Ibsen’s “Hedda Gabler” by expanding its setting to the hermetic majesty of a lavish country estate and the overheated whirl of a welcome-home party for the heroine and her overtaxed husband, and by making her purple past dominate the present tense. The film also brings the intellectual achievement at the play’s center—an academic manuscript—to passionate dramatic life. Here, the action takes place in nineteen-fifties England, Hedda (Tessa Thompson) is Black, and the scholar who was Hedda’s former lover is a woman (Nina Hoss). DaCosta rightly finds Ibsen capacious enough for dramatic and cultural possibilities far beyond his immediate purview—apt tribute, both faithful and free, from one artist to another.

6. “Afternoons of Solitude”

Sixty-five-plus years of lightweight synch-sound cameras—and, then, compact video equipment—have turned observational documentaries into a cliché in constant need of reimagination. Few filmmakers do so as comprehensively as Albert Serra does, with a subject that demands an especially wary form of observation: bullfighting. The result is a rigorous, unflinching view of mortal showdowns ravishingly stylized. The film follows a single torero through a year and a half of bouts, showing behind-the-scenes preparation and after-the-battle medical care and emotional decompression—but it’s dominated by the dangers of the corrida, and Serra, needing to find a method for seeing closely but from safely afar, invents an aesthetic to go with it.

7. “Highest 2 Lowest”

Spike Lee’s remake of Akira Kurosawa’s “High and Low” is better than the original because it filters out the police-procedural sidetrack and endows the story with a substantial and provocative blast of cultural politics. Lee sets it in Brooklyn—where else?—but in a sleek and posh new waterfront high-rise. The protagonist, played by Denzel Washington, is a music executive who must ransom the kidnapped teen-age son of his longtime friend, and whose rescue effort brings him deep into the world of hip-hop, which he once boosted and now disdains. The visual swing, confrontational dialogue, and wide-world stakes expand Lee’s cinematic universe into strange new turf.

7½. “This Life of Mine”

For her last film, Sophie Fillières, who knew that she was terminally ill while making it, ran to the end of a path she’d long been following and leaped into the void. The inhibitions and idiosyncrasies on the basis of which she crafted her protagonists in more than two decades of filmmaking are here expanded to transcendental adventure. Agnès Jaoui—starring as a poet who works at an ad agency where she no longer fits in, grabs avidly but awkwardly at a new life, and then gets sick—invests every impulse and hesitation, every exclamation point and question mark in Fillières’s script, with a self-affirming lilt of liberation. (This film, released in France in 2024, is still unreleased in the U.S.)

8. “Misericordia”

Alain Guiraudie, who has for decades explored the emotional and social dimensions of gay life in rural France, crafts an erotic thriller that’s also a murder mystery, albeit one of a distinctive and inventive sort. A thirtysomething baker returns to a small town for the funeral of his mentor, a man with whom he had been secretly in love. He’s welcomed into the household by the mentor’s widow, and, when that couple’s adult son vanishes, he comes under suspicion. While unfolding the investigation, Guiraudie also finds the town seething with stifled lust that’s ready to burst out volcanically—and that’s inseparable from the natural mystery and wonder of country life.

9. “One Battle After Another”

Two figures lie in a bed with a baby crying in between them.
Teyana Taylor and Leonardo DiCaprio in “One Battle After Another.”Photograph courtesy Warner Bros. / Everett

The lucidity and directness of Paul Thomas Anderson’s premise—revolution is a thrilling and ruinous myth, community organization is comparatively dull but urgently helpful—is this year’s cinematic purloined letter, too obvious to be acknowledged, especially by those who either share in the myth or decry it as reality. Much of the movie is a muddle of tone, with scattershot antics and tossed-off themes amid scenes and moments of immense power. On the other hand, its grand and deft action scenes are balanced by breathtakingly exquisite pinpoint observations: one of the year’s great cinematic touches is a small rug rolling itself back automatically, by design, to conceal a secret escape hatch.

10. “Marty Supreme”

This hectic and violent, romantic and antic drama, set in 1952 and freely adapted from the life of the table-tennis champion Marty Reisman, stars Timothée Chalamet as a fast-talking, shamelessly self-serving, recklessly self-confident young star of the game whose schemes propel him far from his Lower East Side beginnings—into the city’s high-culture cloisters, the criminal underworld, and the realm of international diplomacy. As directed by Josh Safdie (who wrote the script with Ronald Bronstein), the tale lurches wildly through a series of tense adventures that defy logic and prudence, as Marty himself does, in favor of experience and excitement—and that fill the screen with a tangy array of brazen, willful characters who put up a good fight.

11. “Nouvelle Vague” and “Blue Moon”

Two figures stand wearing suits.
Andrew Scott and Ethan Hawke in “Blue Moon.”Photograph courtesy Sony Pictures Classics / Everett

The accidental diptych offered this year by Richard Linklater, of two artists—the filmmaker Jean-Luc Godard on his way up and the songwriter Lorenz Hart on his way out—also offers contrasting dramatic styles that suggest the polar extremes of bio-pics. “Nouvelle Vague,” about the making of Godard’s first feature, “Breathless,” is a hedgehog movie, defining Godard by the ideas that emerge from his working life with his cast, his crew, and his fellow-filmmakers; it’s a marvel of impersonation. In “Blue Moon,” Linklater’s vision of Hart is personal and fox-like, an intimate portrait of him at a bar as he dispenses glittering aphorisms of lifeworn wisdom in the face of professional and romantic disasters—a marvel of incarnation.

12. “Eephus”

For his first feature, Carson Lund developed a daring premise, telling the story of a single baseball game—in a New England adult-recreational league, some time in the nineteen-nineties, on a field that’s about to be erased by the construction of a school—from the time that the players approach the field to the time that they leave it. Lund keeps the action tethered to the site, ranging no farther than the dugouts, the woods beyond the outfield, and the nearest street. From this challenge, Lund provides a pointillistic group portrait of idiosyncratic characters, parses the sport’s action with a singularly analytical yet subjective eye, and expands the melancholy of farewells to symphonic dimensions.

13. “Peter Hujar’s Day”

From the amazing but narrow premise of reënacting a 1974 interview of the photographer Peter Hujar by the writer Linda Rosenkrantz, Ira Sachs develops a mighty and vivid portrait of an era and a milieu—and a memorial for Hujar himself, who died in 1987, of aids. The subject of the conversation is what Hujar did in the previous day. The movie has only two actors, Ben Whishaw and Rebecca Hall, but their performances are more than merely precise and expressive—they’re evocative, and what they evoke is the people under discussion, such as Susan Sontag and Allen Ginsberg. The movie conjures them all, bringing these personalities to the mind’s eye as vividly as if they were physically filmed as characters.

14. “Invention”

In a year of father-and-daughter movies, it’s refreshing to see this boldly accomplished daughter-and-father movie, from the woman’s point of view—one that’s sharpened and amplified by its blend of fiction and nonfiction. It’s made jointly by Courtney Stephens, who directed, and Callie Hernandez, who co-wrote it and plays Carrie Fernandez, who travels to a rural Massachusetts town to claim the ashes of her late father and gets entangled in the economic, social, and supernatural mysteries surrounding a dubious medical invention that he’d tried to market. With observational precision and unhinged dialogue, the filmmakers traverse the wilds of conspiracies and frauds to discern mighty and enduring connections of nature and culture.

15. “The Fishing Place”

The veteran American independent filmmaker Rob Tregenza, filming for the second time in Norway, here probes the country’s history in a drama set during its occupation by Nazi Germany during the Second World War. A Norwegian woman who’s installed as the housekeeper for a German émigré priest in exile gets caught in a tangle of conflicting loyalties and high-stakes maneuvers. The movie is a series of intimate confrontations, public and private, which Tregenza—doing his own virtuosic cinematography—films in monumentally extended shots, mounting the camera on a crane that he wields like a paintbrush that ultimately pivots toward his own activity in one of the boldest and strangest of recent reflexive twists.

16. “This Woman”

This first feature by Alan Zhang, which she co-wrote with Hihi Lee, builds a shifting interplay of fiction and nonfiction into the melodramatic story of a young woman in Beijing named Beibei, a real-estate agent who gets drawn ever closer, albeit platonically, to a male colleague whose wife lashes out threateningly. Burdened with family obligations, Beibei needs money and takes increasingly desperate measures to get it—then the pandemic freezes her life in place. With coolly passionate images, frankly declarative dialogue, and interludes in the form of interviews, Zhang discerningly sees through the characters’ immediate troubles to the pressures imposed by Chinese society at large.

17. “The Empire”

On a decade-plus roll since the self-reinventive inspirations of “Li’l Quinquin,” Bruno Dumont extends that local epic to cosmic dimensions in a “Star Wars” parody set on France’s rugged northern coast. With a story of secret cabals and a child born to rule, Dumont projects the nasty prejudices and bureaucratic rigors of local politics, the tangles of family allegiances, and the tender grunge of young lust into divine and diabolical clashes run from celestial and subterranean castles. The result is as outrageous and uproarious as it is visionary.

18. “Fire of Wind”

The Portuguese director Marta Mateus’s first feature, baring layers of history and legend beneath local events, is set in a vineyard where laborers, menaced by a bull that gets free—or perhaps has been unleashed against them—take refuge high in the estate’s trees. There, they tell stories of their lives and the difficulties and deprivations that they’ve long endured, including ones involving war and persecution. The cast features nonprofessional actors drawn from the area; their declamatory style of performance, along with Mateus’s hieratic images, endow the movie’s dramatic realism with the power of myth.

19. “On Becoming a Guinea Fowl”

The Zambian-born British director Rungano Nyoni sets this drama in Zambia’s capital, Lusaka, where a young woman who has recently returned home from Europe for a family visit chances, on a late-night drive, to find a corpse in the road: her uncle. In the resulting turmoil, female relatives voice accusations that he had sexually assaulted them. As family secrets emerge, the protagonist is outraged to discover the prevalence of sexual predation—along with the power of patriarchal institutions and a code of silence to protect the predators. Nyoni films with a keen-edged clarity while finding in daily life a rich array of symbols ready to release their explosive meaning.

20. “If I Had Legs I’d Kick You”

Closeup of a figure lying on bed with hand on head looking downward to the other side of bed.
Rose Byrne in “If I Had Legs I’d Kick You.”Photograph by Logan White / A24

Mary Bronstein, in her second feature, captures fury under pressure with as distinctive a tone and a style, and as unusual a realm of sympathies, as she did in her first, “Yeast.” In the story of a mother whose chronically ill daughter requires exceptional attention and whose husband, a sea captain, is away for long stretches, Bronstein discovers new and nerve-shredding ways to compose and deploy closeups, turns casual encounters into emotionally violent crises, and—amid intense visual identification with the protagonist (incarnated with red-hot energy by Rose Byrne)—doesn’t hesitate to consider in context the calmer virtues of forethought and reason.

As a general rule, documentaries should be judged no differently from fiction films. But, in this year of foregrounded spectacle, the rule is hard to keep to. The best of this year’s many excellent nonfiction films are no less worthy than the year’s fictions, but it’s essentially impossible to rank comparatively across the two categories. So I’m putting them on their own here: “Suburban Fury,” “Life After,” “Pavements,” “Put Your Soul on Your Hand and Walk,” “Zodiac Killer Project,” “Carol & Joy.” ♦

Building a State of Fear in “Extremist”

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Watch “Extremist.”

On November 16, 2023, Sasha Skochilenko, a thirty-three-year-old artist, poet, and musician, stood in court to give what is known in the Russian judicial system as the “last word”—final remarks of the accused before the judge delivers a verdict. Skochilenko, from inside a metal cage, where defendants are confined during courtroom hearings, said her case was so “strange and ridiculous” that it felt like an April Fools’ joke, as if “confetti will start falling from above.”

A version of the speech appears near the end of “Extremist,” a short film by the Russian director Alexander Molochnikov, who now lives in New York. The film reimagines the so-called crime that made Skochilenko famous, an avatar for both the cruelty of Putin’s system, and the bravery of the few who would risk their fates and freedom to oppose it. “Even though I am behind bars, I am freer than you,” Skochilenko tells the judge. “I can make my own decisions and say what I think.” She adds, “Maybe that is why the state fears me and others like me so much and keeps me in a cage like a dangerous animal.”

Nearly two years earlier, following Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, Skochilenko had replaced the price tags in a St. Petersburg supermarket with various antiwar messages: “The Russian Army bombed an art school in Mariupol where about 400 people were seeking shelter,” and “Putin has been lying to you from the television screen for 20 years. The result of these lies is our willingness to accept war and senseless deaths.”

That act of guerrilla performance art was noticed by a shopper at the store, a seventy-six-year-old retiree, who reported the new tags to police. (The woman, Galina Baranova, told a Russian news site, “I’m proud of what I did. Isn’t it a real disgrace to see a crime and just turn away?”) An investigation worthy of an extremist ensued: officers examined surveillance footage from the store and tracked down Skochilenko, charging her with the crime of disseminating “knowingly false information” about the actions of the Russian armed forces. After she delivered her last word in court, the judge sentenced her to seven years in prison.

Molochnikov told me that the film does not purport to be a documentary, or even based on Skochilenko’s story, but, rather, he said, “inspired” by it. One key artistic reinterpretation is that, in the film, Skochilenko—who lives with her partner, Sonya—resides in the same apartment building as Baranova. The three of them have pleasant, neighborly relations, saying hello and discussing, in one scene, an afternoon of mushroom picking in the woods. At first Baranova doesn’t know who she has denounced; when she learns it’s Skochilenko, she feels a pang of remorse, telling police, “They’re decent girls.” But her attitude toward them eventually hardens. The price-tag stunt, she says in court, was a “well-planned and cynical” attack. “She is guilty.”

The proximity of Skochilenko and her accuser heightens the film’s sense of tragedy, the almost accidental way that lives collide and shatter—a phenomenon that can happen with terrifying ease in wartime Russia. “The incautious actions of one person, and then a second, together lead to disaster,” Molochnikov told me.

That feeling of closeness, a physical proximity paired with a deep moral disconnect, is a broader metaphor for those in Russia with antiwar views. Molochnikov told me of how, in the days following the invasion, he was filming a television series in a small town in the Vologda region, hundreds of miles from Moscow. He got along well with the locals. “We drank tea together, talking about all sorts of things, not connected to war or politics—it was quite pleasant and warm.” But he could see they supported the war. The friendly receptionist in the hotel listened to Vladimir Solovyov, a particularly noxious pro-war media personality and propagandist, all day. “We had so much in common,” Molochnikov recalled. “But there was a vast abyss between us all the same.”

The fates of the director and his protagonist have taken a number of unexpected turns in the past few years. When Molochnikov wrote the script, Skochilenko was behind bars in Russia. But in August, 2024, a week before he travelled to Riga to shoot the film, she was released in a large-scale prisoner exchange between Russia and several Western countries. (Russia freed more than a dozen political prisoners, including the American journalist Evan Gershkovich.)

Molochnikov told me he viewed the essence of Skochilenko’s heroism less in her initial decision to swap the price tags—“an act of chance, without a full understanding of the consequences”—but more in how she refused to renounce her beliefs. (“You think it’s fake?” she says to the police investigator, in the film, who offers her a lighter sentence in exchange for a public disavowal.) “That is the decision of a hero,” Molochnikov said. “That she didn’t shift into reverse.” Skochilenko, he said, proved herself to be “capable of actions of which we—or at least I—are not.”

As for Molochnikov, he had been a precocious success as a director in Moscow. He staged his first play at the celebrated Moscow Chekhov Art Theatre at twenty-two; when he was twenty-seven, his first opera premièred at the Bolshoi Theatre. But after the invasion, he made a series of antiwar posts on social media. The Bolshoi removed his productions from its repertoire. He left Russia in August of 2022 and enrolled in a graduate program in directing and screenwriting at Columbia University.

“Extremist” was his thesis project. He presented his journey as a rather dramatic and unambiguous case of free fall—“from the twenty-fifth floor to somewhere around minus one,” he explained. But he also feels freer, or at least wiser. “Forgive the pretense,” he told me, “but it became clear to me that what matters is not the size of the stage or budget but the depth and meaning of what you’re trying to say.” In “Extremist,” without spoiling too much, the confetti—in all of its surrealism and absurdity—has the true last word.

Guanyu Xu’s Powerful Photographs of Immigration Limbo

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The photographer Guanyu Xu, born in China, based in Chicago, creates densely layered images of installations in domestic spaces that make them look like exploding scrapbooks. In 2018, he began the series “Temporarily Censored Home,” for which he queered large-scale color images of his parents’ house in Beijing with a dizzying array of snapshots and appropriated photos reflecting Xu’s otherwise unacknowledged life as a gay man. His claim to a vivid place in his family’s home, however fleeting, was both playful and powerful. Xu’s new series, “Resident Aliens,” was made in the apartments of immigrants who are hoping to become U.S. citizens but are still making their way through the legal process. By combining their family photos with pictures he made in their homes, Xu helps them stake a claim on a space that looks as fragile as a house of cards.

“RK0828201801142022” from 2022 part of “Resident Aliens.”
“RK-08282018-01142022,” from 2022, part of “Resident Aliens.”Photograph by Guanyu Xu / Courtesy Yancey Richardson

Xu’s resident aliens (he calls them his “collaborators”) are from China, India, Croatia, Sweden, Canada, and elsewhere. The people in the show (at Yancey Richardson, through Dec. 20) are living, for now, in many different cities in the U.S. The process of applying for legal status or citizenship involves regular recordkeeping and documentation—proof of an immigrant’s day-to-day existence that Xu picks up on visually by borrowing and blowing up some of that proof, such as keepsakes and selfies. By shuffling these more personal images with his own photographs of their rooms—draperies, windows, unmade beds, a shower stall—Xu constructs a fascinating if confounding new reality, a stage set destined to be struck. Suspended between permanence and precarity, Xu’s images mirror their occupants’ status and state of mind.—Vince Aletti


The New York City skyline

About Town

Indie Rock

The singer-songwriter and producer Melina Duterte emerged as a lone D.I.Y. virtuoso in the mid-twenty-tens, performing as Jay Som. Duterte played all of the instruments on demos that she first released to Bandcamp, which then became her début, “Turn Into,” and which established her multifaceted dream-pop sound alongside her 2017 bedroom opus, “Everybody Works.” In 2019, she began focussing on her work as a producer and engineer, opening her up to more collaboration: she was in the indie-rock supergroup boygenius’s touring band, and “Belong,” her first album in six years, is her first to feature other writers and musicians. In its songs, a one-woman band finds her place: among the players.—Sheldon Pearce (Warsaw; Dec. 11.)


Off Broadway

The composer Philip Venables and the director Ted Huffman turn Larry Mitchell’s 1977 book “The Faggots and Their Friends Between Revolutions” into a singspiel—revellers amble around a dim stage, accompanying themselves on harpsichord, viola da gamba, and, occasionally, plastic buckets that they beat in martial time. The first line (sung in haunting soprano by Mariamielle Lamagat) sets the key: “It’s been a long time, and we are still not free.” The show takes an oddly languorous approach to Mitchell’s unpretentious fable, a chronicle of “faggot” resistance (via nature, via the exchange of “the magical cock fluid”) against “the men.” It’s telling that the best moment comes when the deliciously mischievous Kit Green breaks the fourth wall—not to mention the ensemble’s air of reverential uplift.—Helen Shaw (Park Avenue Armory; through Dec. 14.)


Dance
Alvin Ailey American Dance Theatre in “Revelations.”
Alvin Ailey American Dance Theatre in “Revelations.”Photograph by Danica Paulos

Most performances by Alvin Ailey American Dance Theatre seem like dances of the gods. But in “Jazz Island,” a première by Maija García, some of the dancers do embody deities of Haitian vodou, called lwa. The work, which tells a folktale of gods interceding in the lives of men, is a return to a neglected mode of storytelling, and it rides on a rich and characterful Afro-Caribbean score by Etienne Charles. Other débuts during the company’s month at City Center—alongside repertory and plenty of “Revelations”—include a work by Matthew Neenan with a score by Heather Christian (a MacArthur Fellow this year) and a brief reimagining, by Jamar Roberts, of Ailey’s 1961 “Hermit Songs.”—Brian Seibert (New York City Center; through Jan. 4.)


Art

“Beauty has no obvious use…yet civilization could not do without it,” Sigmund Freud wrote in 1930. Today, at the “Dress, Dreams, and Desire” exhibition, at F.I.T., beauty abounds, as the show parses the historical dialogue between fashion and psychoanalysis. How do clothes reveal our secret fantasies? Why do we dream about being naked? If a man wears a particularly long necktie, is he compensating for something? Such questions are posed and addressed in the exhibit’s sensually lit chambers, populated by waifish mannequins decked out in extravagant frocks. Gowns from Gaultier, McQueen, Versace, and others are put in conversation with the heavyweights of psychoanalytic thought—mainly Lacan and Freud—via informative commentary curated by Valerie Steele, the museum’s director.—Leo Lasdun (The Museum at FIT; through Jan. 4.)


Broadway
Christiani Pitts and Sam Tutty in TWO STRANGERS.
Christiani Pitts and Sam Tutty.Photograph by Matthew Murphy

Arriving in New York without a solid plan is both the topic and the plight of the musical “Two Strangers (Carry a Cake Across New York),” by Jim Barne and Kit Buchan, directed by Tim Jackson, transferring from London’s West End. A naïve Brit, Dougal (Sam Tutty), and a world-weary New Yorker, Robin (Christiani Pitts), meet when Dougal comes to town to see his estranged father marry Robin’s sister; their titular errand leads to sweeter things. Buchan’s story wouldn’t fill a side plate; any of his many plot holes could swallow it. The extraordinary Tutty, however, is a whole dish: he manages to play both adorably inaccurate (“It’s the capital city of the U.S.A.!”) and secretly swaggy; Robin falls for him long after we do.—H.S. (Longacre; open run.)


Movies

Amalie R. Rothschild’s first film, “Woo Who? May Wilson,” from 1969—a thirty-four-minute short, now streaming—raises a portrait of an artist to a vision of the times. Wilson, who was sixty-three during the filming, was a homemaker in suburban Maryland whose artistic pursuits prompted her husband to end the marriage. In 1966, she moved to Manhattan, where Rothschild interviewed her and filmed her in daily life, whether at mundane tasks or in the creation of her distinctive work—especially collages featuring her comedic photo-booth self-portraits and assemblages of domestic objects. The movie is also an inspired collage of Wilson’s joyful but tenuous social life with younger artists, her contemplative solitude, her stringent artistic self-critique, and her indignant reflections on the domestic oppressions borne by women of her generation.—Richard Brody (OVID.tv and Kanopy.)


What to Watch

Alexandra Schwartz on her favorite Shakespeare movies.

Kenneth Branagh and Emma Thompson in “Much Ado About Nothing.”
Kenneth Branagh and Emma Thompson in “Much Ado About Nothing.”Photograph from RGR Collection / Alamy

With the release of Chloé Zhao’s “Hamnet,” the Bard is back onscreen—not that he ever went away. Here is a highly subjective list of five of my favorite Shakespeare film adaptations.

Much Ado About Nothing” (1993). I grew up in the nineteen-nineties, when the names Shakespeare and Kenneth Branagh seemed inextricably entwined. Branagh’s sumptuously sun-dappled Messina remains my picture of heaven. Michael Keaton as the pompous constable Dogberry is ridiculous in the best sense, and Emma Thompson’s barbed-tongued Beatrice is a paragon performance of wit, heartbreak, and joy.

A Midsummer Night’s Dream” (1935). After the Nazis confiscated the celebrated Austrian stage director Max Reinhardt’s theatres in Germany, Reinhardt came to Hollywood and directed this masterpiece for Warner Brothers. (His fellow-emigré, William Dieterle, co-directed.) Shimmering with German Expressionist style—and reams of decorative cellophane—the film features Olivia de Havilland at the very start of her career, as Hermia, alongside James Cagney, as Bottom, and a fourteen-year-old Mickey Rooney, as Puck.

Throne of Blood” (1957). The Scottish play finds gorgeous, terrifying expression in Akira Kurosawa’s war-soaked vision of feudal Japan. Kurosawa’s black-and-white images are indelible—instead of Shakespeare’s Weird Sisters, we get an eerie old man slowly spinning a wheel with a stick—as is the sublimely ominous atmosphere. The climactic scene, in which Washizu, the Macbeth figure, played by Toshiro Mifune, is assailed by his enemies’ arrows, remains one of my favorites in all of cinema.

Chimes at Midnight” (1966). For decades, it was nearly impossible to watch Orson Welles’s tribute to Falstaff, which Welles pieced together from the “Henry” plays. That it can now be summoned up to stream in an instant is something of a miracle. Welles commits himself so deeply to Shakespeare’s most ingenious comic creation that the film has often been seen as a kind of self-portrait, filled in equal measure with delightful ribaldry and heartbreaking pathos.

10 Things I Hate About You” (1999). Did I mention that I’m a child of the nineties? Gil Junger’s rom-com manages to be both one of the best high-school comedies of an era full of them and a stellar contemporary adaptation of the very unmodern “Taming of the Shrew.” Heath Ledger and Julia Stiles, as bad boy Patrick Verona and the rebellious Kat Stratford, both got their big breaks here, and watching Ledger croon Frankie Valli’s “Can’t Take My Eyes Off You” still transmits an electric thrill.


P.S. Good stuff on the internet: